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NIXON AND THE ENVIRONMENT: CLEAN AIR, AUTOMOBILES AND
REELECTION
by
Erwin Mauricio Escobar
A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of
The Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of
Master of Arts
Florida Atlantic University
Boca Raton, Florida
May 2013
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author wishes to express his sincere thanks and love to his wife
Evelyn Escobar, to his children, and parents for their support and
encouragement throughout the writing of this manuscript. The author is grateful
to his thesis advisor, Dr. Mark Rose, to the thesis committee and the faculty of
the Department of History at Florida Atlantic University for providing a great
educational experience.
iii
ABSTRACT
Author:
Erwin Mauricio Escobar
Title:
Nixon and the Environment: Clean Air, Automobiles and
Reelection
Institution:
Florida Atlantic University
Thesis Advisor:
Dr. Mark Rose
Degree:
Master of Arts
Year:
2013
In the decades after World War II the United States became the most
prosperous nation in the world. Yet, that prosperity and growth had a negative
impact on the environmental quality of the nation. By the mid 1960s there was a
rise in concern over environmental issues in the American public. Consequently,
President Richard M. Nixon in his determination to give the American people
what they sought decided to enact policies to bring the environmental crisis to an
end. Among the environmental policies of the Nixon Administration was the
iv
Clean Air Act of 1970, a highly controversial piece of legislation that placed
tough regulations on the automobile industry.
Due to the significant role of the auto industry in the American economy,
and Nixon’s concerns over reelection, there were two major shifts in businessgovernment relations during this era. The first one was characterized by
determination to protect the environment with little attention to complaints from
the industry. The second one was about protecting the profitability of the
industry while giving little attention to environmental problems.
v
NIXON AND THE ENVIRONMENT: CLEAN AIR, AUTOMOBILES AND
REELECTION
Introduction……………………………………………………………………………...1
The Clean Air Act: A Result of Many Pressures……………………………………..6
Signing the Clean Air Act: The First Big Shift in Business-Government
Relations of the Nixon Era…………………………………………………………….23
The Automobile Industry and the Prolonged Fight Against Clean Air
Regulations……………………………………………………………………………..36
From the Clean Air Act to the Energy Act of 1974: The Second Big Shift in
Business-Government Relations of the Nixon Era…………………………………48
Conclusion……………………………………………………………………………...61
vi
INTRODUCTION
In the decades after followed World War II the United States became the
most prosperous nation in the world. Yet, that prosperity and growth after
World War II affected environmental quality. Massive suburbanization,
increased growth in car ownership as well as immense population growth,
combined with inadequate waste treatment procedures and few environmental
regulations contributed to the deterioration of environmental quality. Starting in
the early 1960’s, Americans took up environmental issues.
Consequently, anxiety over environmental issues became extremely
popular for Americans during this era. In the mid 1960s environmentally
conscious Americans brought these issues into the political arena.
In 1968, Richard M. Nixon was elected President. During the campaign
Nixon had little to say about the environment. However, after a few months in
office he observed that the country was facing environmental problems so severe
that presidential action was required. Consequently, the Nixon administration
became one of the most environmentally active presidencies in American history.
Among proposals and actions the President took were: the establishment of the
1
Environmental Quality Council, and signing the National Environmental
Policy Act into law.
Nixon also worked actively on legislative reforms like, the Water
Pollution Act Amendments; the Clean Air Act Amendments; the Marine
Protection Research and Sanctuaries Act; the National Land Use Policy Act; and
submitted to Congress a landmark Toxic Substances Control Act. In addition,
Nixon submitted a Noise Control Act, recommended the extension of the Solid
Waste Disposal Act of 1965, by 1972 he had proposed eighteen new wilderness
areas to Congress, and that year, an election year, he proposed another 18 areas,
which would add 1.3 million acres to the nation’s wilderness system.1
Historically oriented scholarship on Richard Nixon’s environmental
policies has focused on two areas. The first topic has been about whom should
get the credit for the environmental policies that were enacted during this era,
and in the second, historians have assessed Nixon’s authenticity. Did he care
principally about the environment or about politics these scholars have asked.
Charles S. Warren credited Nixon for environmental progress in America
especially during his first term. By contrast, Michael Genovese found Nixon
politically right-wing and pro-industry, and he credited Congress for
1
Russel Train, “The Environmental Record of the Nixon Administration,” Presidential Studies
Quarterly 26 (Winter 1996): 188-191.
2
environmental leadership. Michael E. Kraft attributed environmental progress to
an extraordinary group of policy entrepreneurs on Capitol Hill. Jacqueline
Vaughan Switzer argues that Nixon initially opposed the environmental
initiatives but eventually succumbed to increasing public pressure and instructed
his staff to rush through new environmental legislation.
The League of Conservation Voters volume was most critical, finding
shortcomings in Nixon policy on water development, pollution, energy, public
lands management, wildlife protection, pesticides, population, the workplace,
and urban environments; and Paul Milazzo has argued that Nixon’s
environmental policies came as a result of a group of legislators that he calls
“unlikely environmentalists.”2
Considering the relatively narrow analysis found in the scholarship of
Nixon’s environmental policies, it is significant to look at this area of the
Administration from a different perspective. This perspective should analyze not
only the President, his work and his intentions related to the environment, but
Joan Hoff, Nixon Reconsidered, (New York: Basic Books, 1994); Charles S. Warren, The Nixon
Environmental Record: a Mixed Picture, in Richard M. Nixon, Politician, President, Administrator, ed.
Leon Friedman and William Levantrosser, (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1990); Michael A.
Genovese, The Nixon Presidency: Power and Politics in Turbulent Times, (Westport, CT: Greenwood
Press, 1990); Michael E Kraft, Environmental Policy and Politics, (New York: Harper Collins College
Publishers, 1996); Jacqueline Vaughan Switzer, Environmental Politics: Domestic and Global
Dimensions, (New York: Saint Martin’s, 1994); Train, The Environmental Record of the Nixon
Administration.
2
3
also consider the involvement and the influence of outside groups that played a
remarkable role in the decisions that were made.
Among the outside groups urging the President to enact environmental
regulations were the environmental movement, environmentally conscious
legislators, the strong involvement of labor unions in environmental issues, and
the fact that the environmental crisis was at its highest point in 1969 when
Richard Nixon took office.
On the other hand, there was a sector of American society that sought to
influence the President in a different direction. This was the industrial sector
which represented the major corporations of the United States. Since the
beginning of the environmental movement American businesses played a
uniquely important role in environmental policy making. Business corporations
sought to create a business friendly environmental policy because this meant
little regulations and less costs to improve environmentally conscious efficiency. 3
In the midst of these forces was President Nixon, an experienced
politician, a man concerned with public opinion and motivated by reelection.
The environment was never at the top of Nixon’s priorities. According to John
Ehrlichman, Assistant to the President on Domestic Affairs, Nixon always liked
3
Michael E. Kraft and Sheldon Kamieniecki. Business and Environmental Policy: Corporate
Interests in the American Political System, (Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press, 2007), 1-5.
4
foreign policy and was not passionate about domestic affairs which in many
cases he delegated to others; the environment was one of them. Ehrlichman once
said, “Nixon insisted that I don’t bother him about many areas… the
environment was one of them.”4 Although Nixon’s main area of interest was
foreign policy, political expediency forced him to remain very active in areas of
domestic affairs.
According to John Whittaker who served at the White House and the
Department of Interior during the environmental crisis, Nixon was not very
interested in environmental issues during his first year as president, he feared a
potential backlash effect in the form of fewer jobs, slower economic growth, and
higher prices. But this approach changed once Nixon realized that he needed to
take the lead against environmental degradation for the good of the country and
the popularity of the Administration.
A careful analysis of the developments leading to the Clean Air Act of
1970 provides a broader and better understanding of the environmental policies
of the Nixon Administration and the president himself. It is significant to look at
the developments related to the Clean Air Act of 1970 as clean air was for Nixon
America’s most important environmental resource; for the United Auto Workers
4
John Ehrlichman, Witness to Power: The Nixon Years (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1982), 208.
5
and environmentalists was a central point in their activism; for legislators was a
key legal project and for the auto industry was a determining factor in how
productive their business could become.
6
CHAPTER I
THE CLEAN AIR ACT: A RESULT OF MANY PRESSURES
Among the most important of Nixon’s environmental proposals was the
Clean Air Act of 1970. The administration proposed this legislation as a result of
demands from different sectors of the American population. From middle school
to college students and labor unions, to environmental activists, senators, and
representatives, all pushed in favor of actions to bring the environmental crisis to
an end. Consequently, the president took action starting with the problem of air
pollution. As Nixon worked on protecting the nation’s air in an attempt to ensure
his popularity, he received strong pressure from environmentally conscious
Americans to enact tough regulations on the auto industry leading to the signing
of the Clean Air Act of 1970.
In 1968, President Richard Nixon appointed transition task forces and one
of these was the Task Force on Natural Resources and Environment. This task
force consisted of a group of twenty academicians, environmentalists, and
7
Corporate executives chaired by Russell Train. On December 5, 1968, this task
force wrote a report and presented it to Nixon. The report stated that the country
was facing an environmental crisis which could negatively affect the health, and
the standard of living of the American people.5 The report shocked President
Nixon and convinced him of the dangers that could come if the environmental
crisis was not brought to an end.
President Richard Nixon did not take action against this problem until
February 10, 1970. On this date, in a special message to Congress on
environmental quality, he outlined a comprehensive thirty seven point program
embracing twenty three major legislative proposals and fourteen new measures.
The administration would take these measures by executive order in five
major categories: water pollution control; solid waste management; bureaucratic
reorganization; parkland and public recreation, and air pollution.6
In this message, the President acknowledged the environmental
challenges the country was facing and emphasized the administration’s
John Whittaker, Striking a Balance: Environment and Natural Resources Policy in the Nixon-Ford
Years, (Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research Publications,
1976), 6; Report, Natural Resources and Environment Transitional Task Force, December 5, 1968; J.
Brooks Flippen, Nixon and the Environment (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2000)
5-16.
6 James Rathlesberger, Nixon and the Environment: The Politics of Devastation, Thirteen Essays (New
York: Taurus Communications, 1972); Flippen, Nixon and the Environment, 21-23.; Public Papers of
the Presidents of the United States, Richard M. Nixon, 1970.; Special Message to the Congress on
Environmental Quality. February 10, 1970 (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office) 99.
5
8
commitment to the environment by saying: “Our current environmental
situation calls for fundamentally new philosophies of land, air, and water use,
for stricter regulation, for expanded government action, for greater citizen
involvement, and for new programs.”7 As a result of Nixon’s commitment to
bring the environmental crisis to an end and the multiple pressures he faced
concerning this problem, he signed the Clean Air Act of 1970.
The signing of this act did not come from Nixon’s pro-environment
ideology but from the political expediency of a President trying to respond to
pressures coming from different sectors of the American population. Since the
publication of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring in 1962, the environment had
emerged as an important topic in American society ranging from government
officials to middle school, high school, and college students.
Dana Gale, a 14 year old girl living in Pendleton Oregon was one of the
hundreds of students who wrote to President Nixon to express concerns about
the nation’s air pollution problem. In return, Nixon replied that he appreciated
her concerns and claimed the administration as well as the rest of the country
should be involved in solving the problem. The President’s answer to the student
said: “It was heartening to learn of your strong interest in stopping the pollution
Public Papers of the President, Richard M. Nixon, 1970, Special Message to the Congress on
Environmental Quality. February 10, 1970 (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office) 96-97.
7
9
of our natural environment. All American citizens, young and old, must work
together if we are to succeed in making our country the clean and healthful place
all of us want it to be.”8 College students were highly involved in these
developments as well. Among them was Denis Hayes, a twenty five year old
Harvard graduate student, who recruited a number of volunteers for proenvironment activism.
The 1960s had been a time when growing numbers of Americans
organized to protest against racism, poverty as well as the environment. The
repression of African Americans and women, the apparent unexplainable reality
of the war in Vietnam, the greed of large corporations, and the hard work of the
average middle class were among the issues they had battled besides the
environment. American society had demanded changes in all of these areas and
when Silent Spring was printed, it sparked huge concerns and activism related to
environmental protection.9
After Silent Spring, the environment erupted as a topic of conversation and
concern among ordinary Americans. There was remarkable growth in new
membership for environmental organizations such as the National Audubon
Box CFSU H 30, Folder EX HE 9-1.
Mark Hamilton Lytle, The Gentle Subversive: Rachel Carson, Silent Spring and the Rise of the
Environmental Movement (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007), 133-150; John Whittaker,
Striking a Balance, 9.
8
9
10
society, the National Wildlife Federation, the Sierra Club, and the Izaak Walton
League. Added to this, five new important environmental organizations emerged
between 1967 and 1971: The Environmental Defense Fund, Friends of the Earth,
the Natural Resources Defense Council, Environmental Action, and the Union of
Concerned Scientists. Between 1967 and 1971, enrollment in the Sierra Club, an
important environmental society in America, grew from 48,000 to 130,000, and in
1970, the membership of the National Audubon Society more than doubled
rising to 150,000.
A large number of environmental periodicals and journals also appeared;
University faculty started teaching courses about environmental science, and on
April 22, 1970, around twenty million Americans participated in Earth Day. 10
Earth Day was one of the largest displays of unity in American history.
People from different cities around the country such as New York, Washington,
Philadelphia and Los Angeles participated in the festivities. Over ten thousand
schools and two thousand colleges took part in an event that was meant to create
environmental awareness and in return became the most important episode in
American environmental history.
Flippen, Nixon and the Environment, 13; Lytle, The Gentle Subversive, 165-170; Walter Rosenbaum,
Environmental Politics and Policy (Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly, 1985), 68,75; David
Vogel, Fluctuating Fortunes: The Political Power of Business in America (New York: Basic Books, Inc.,
1989), 65-66.
10
11
Environmentalists chose earth day to sound an alarm that would wake up
the country to the environmental crisis. With this in mind, the demonstrators
fashioned creative tactics to attract media attention. For instance, a group of
students at the University of Minnesota who were members of the Students for
Environmental Defense, conducted a mock funeral service for the internal
combustion engine lowering an engine into a coffin in downtown Minneapolis.
The first Earth Day placed the environment at the top of the list of priorities for
citizens at all levels of society.11
As additional Americans developed an awareness of environmental
problems, President Nixon found himself in the middle of a national ideological
shift. In 1965 only 28 percent of the people considered the problem of pollution
was serious in their area, and by 1970, 69 percent of the people considered it a
serious issue. Gallup Polls from 1969 and 1970 show that public concern over
water and air pollution jumped from tenth place in the summer of 1969 to fifth
place in the summer of 1970 and the American public considered this problem
more important than race, crime and teenage problems. Also, a Harris poll
showed that Americans rated pollution as the most serious problem facing their
communities; and Time magazine named the environment as the issue of the
11
Flippen, Nixon and the Environment, 6-10.
12
year for 1970.12
Besides the rise of environmentalism and the ideological shift that spread
because of the movement, there was another sector in American society that had
pushed for fundamental changes in environmental legislation prior to the
signing of the Clean Air Act of 1970, the worker unions. Historians have
overlooked the important role of the worker unions and unionized employees in
the rise of concern over environmental issues in American society. Organized
labor demonstrated strong support for many environmental initiatives prior to
1970 and before most Americans became aware of such issues.
Among environmentally active worker unions, union officials of the
United Auto Workers (UAW) were the most energetic up to the 1970’s. The
UAW demonstrated considerable interest in land use, wilderness preservation,
and pollution control. In 1965, Walter Reuther, president of the UAW along with
other union leaders organized a ‘United Action for Clean Water Conference’ that
brought together community leaders, conservationists and hundreds of union
members. By 1967, leaders and representatives of the UAW grew more ambitious
in their environmental goals. As a result, they created a Department of
Hazel Erskine, “The Polls: Pollution and its Cost,” Public Opinion Quarterly, Spring 1972, 121;
Opinion Research Corporation, “Public Opinion On Key Domestic Issues,” (Princeton, N.J., May
1971), 17.
12
13
Conservation and Resource Development under the leadership of vice president
Olga M. Madar, who was also the head of the union’s Department of Recreation
and Leisure-Time activities. Olga M. Madar focused on encouraging union
members to take part in solving the air and water pollution problems and other
environmental issues of their various states and communities.13
In January of 1970, Walter Reuther, held a press conference where he said,
“I think the environmental crisis has reached such catastrophic proportions that
… the labor movement is now obligated to raise this question at the bargaining
table in any industry that is in a measurable way contributing to man’s
deteriorating living environment.” Consequently, during negotiations with
employers in 1970, locals made nearly 750 environmental protection demands,
mostly concerning pollution at the workplace, but also including wider
environmental issues. Later on in the same year, representatives of the OCAW
and the Steelworkers joined the efforts of the UAW and testified before Congress
that pollution control was necessary even if it reduced employment in their
industries.14
Auto Workers were important contributors to the formation of a robust
Robert Mitchell, “From Elite Quarrel to Mass Movement,” Society 18 (Summer 1981): 76-77; New
York Times, November 7, 1965.
14 Scott Dewey, “Working for the Environment: Organized Labor and the Origins of
Environmentalism in the United States, 1948-1970,” Environmental History 3 (Winter 1998), 56; See
also: Solidarity Magazine, 1968-1970.
13
14
environmental movement and became a key factor in the developments that led
to the passing of fundamental environmental laws during the Nixon
administration. In Michigan they were active through a collection of local and
state sportsmen’s clubs, and international and local chapters of the UAW. These
clubs and organizations were the primary means by which Michigan auto
workers pioneered working class environmentalism.15
Environmentalism, the ideological shift and worker unions were not the
only pressures Nixon was facing prior to the signing of the Clean Air Act of 1970.
Added to these, was the pressure coming from pro-environment legislators.
Since the 1950s, legislators had started working to reconfigure the boundaries of
environmental politics. In the American Congress ideas about environmental
values started to become more influential long before 1970. Throughout the 1950s
and 1960s, legislators like John Blatnik and Edmund Muskie pushed for some of
the nation’s most important pollution control statues like the first water pollution
control legislation in 1956. Throughout his political career, Senator Muskie was
successful in establishing himself as the nation’s preeminent designer of
environmental policy.16
Chad Montrie, Making a Living: Work and Environment in the United States (Chapell Hill:
University of North Carolina Press, 2008), 91-98.
16 Paul Milazzo, Unlikely Environmentalists: Congress and Clean Water, 1945-1972 (Lawrence,
Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 2006), 6-9.
15
15
Legislators had worked hard for almost two decades to design new laws
and create constituencies to support them. By 1970, at the high point of the
environmental frenzy, they found support in almost the entirety of the American
public. Nixon, who was constantly concerned about popularity and reelection,
took this very seriously as Edmund Muskie was a potential presidential
candidate for the Democratic Party in the upcoming elections.17
In November 1970, Senator Edmund Muskie proposed the initial
amendments to the clean air laws of 1967. His proposal required automobile
emissions of carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides to be reduced
by 90 percent from 1970 levels by 1975 unless the Secretary of Health, Education
and Welfare extended the period for one year. The extension would be subject to
judicial review.
Ironically, when Muskie initially proposed the amendments, President
Nixon joined the automobile industry in opposing the 1975 deadline. Earlier in
1970, officials of the three main automobile companies (Ford Motor Company,
Chrysler Corporation, and General Motors Corporation) had asked in the SenateHouse conference to modify the bill in a way that would give the Secretary of
Paul Milazzo, Unlikely Environmentalists: Congress and Clean Water, 1945-1972 (Lawrence,
Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 20060, 6-9; Marc K. Landy, Marc J. Roberts, Stephen R.
Thomas, The Environmental Protection Agency: Asking the Wrong Questions from Nixon to Clinton
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1994), 28.
17
16
Health, Education and Welfare the authority to grant additional suspensions
each for a period of one year after conducting an appropriate hearing. In
addition, the auto companies had argued that technology was not available to
meet the 1975 deadline. For these reasons, Nixon had sent to the Congress his
version of the bill which asked for a revision of Muskie’s proposal and claimed
that the deadline to meet the reduction in emission standards should be 1980 and
not 1975.18
Nixon’s opposition to Muskie’s initial proposal is an example of his
political philosophy relating to local affairs. The President was willing to enact
tough regulations on businesses yet he also sought to provide them with leeway
to adapt without a loss of profits and jobs. He was aware that a healthy and
prosperous private sector increased the chances for his electoral success. Nixon
was neither a passionate environmentalist nor a pro-business President. Different
from the environmentalist movement, he did not blame industry or progress for
the damage of the environment, in a special message to Congress he said, “there
is no villain in this environmental problem, it comes not from decisions taken but
from decisions neglected, not from malign intention, but from failure to take into
18
New York Times Sept. 23, 1970; November 19, 1970; January 1, 1970.
17
account the full consequences of our actions.”19
After 1970, Nixon did not see progress as environmentally damaging; he
considered that progress and a good economy could be kept while still
protecting the environment.
In his clean air proposals Nixon requested that auto emission standards be
related to judgments about the best technology available within a given timetable
for implementing the standards but Congress did not agree. Instead, Congress
passed auto emission levels based not on any demonstration of available
technology but rather on the degree of air quality thought to be necessary in
urban areas. Auto manufacturers were required to reduce emissions from 1975
model cars 90 percent below the standards applicable to 1970 model cars.
Congress also approved a one year extension of this deadline which could be
granted by the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency under
certain conditions. Besides these two aspects, most of Nixon’s proposals were
passed.
Among the approved Nixon proposals were the establishment of national
air quality standards; the creation of emission standards applicable to major,
newly constructed stationary sources of air pollution; the expansion of
19
Public Papers of the President, Special Message to Congress, Richard Nixon, 1970, 96.
18
streamlined enforcement powers; authority to regulate fuels and fuel additives;
and authority for assembly line testing of auto emission control systems.20
After opposing some of Muskie’s rough proposals in the bill, the
President, as advised by the Office of Management and Budget, the Council on
Environmental Quality, and the Environmental Protection Agency, yielded and
agreed to sign what many called the “Muskie Bill”. Interestingly, Nixon took
credit for the bill by saying, “The Clean Air bill came by the president proposing
and the cooperative efforts of both political parties on Capitol Hill.” 21 Nixon went
as far as not including Edmund Muskie in the list of those who were invited to
the signing of the bill.
According to pro-environmentalist author and activist Barbara Davies,
Nixon’s intention was to take the leadership on the pollution issue, threatening
to undercut one of Muskie’s strong points as a possible presidential contender in
the forthcoming 1972 elections. Muskie answered by saying, “although opposed
in part by the administration, the Act is a nonpartisan Congressional effort”22 and
then proceeded to demand action from the administration to do effective work
Public Law 91-604 (84 Stat. 1676; Whittaker, Striking a Balance, 94; Public Papers of the
Presidents, Special Message to the Congress on Environmental Quality, 1970, 100-104.
21 Public Papers of Presidents, Richard M. Nixon, 1971, 4166; New York Times, January 1, 1971.
22New York Times, January 1, 1971.
20
19
when enforcing the new law. 23
Passing this legislation added strength to Edmund Muskie’s political goals
as it pleased the high number of environmentally conscious voters. Muskie had
been under intense pressure from environmental groups to produce a tough
clean air bill and the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1970 seemed to meet
expectations as long as it was properly enforced. On the other hand, passing this
bill also added strength to the popularity of the President as it showed his
commitment to the environment. Subsequently, Nixon intensified support for the
Clean Air Act by committing to tough enforcement of the bill through the
Environmental Protection Agency. This piece of legislation made almost
everyone happy except for the auto industry.
Added to the pro-environment pressures, the President also had to work
against the pressure of the automobile industry. Industry leaders sought to
make sure that the Clean Air Act was implemented in a business friendly
manner.
By the 1960s the automobile had become a major factor in the United
States’ economy and way of life. In 1965 the auto industry was selling about 9.5
Public Law 91-604 (84 Stat. 1676) December 31, 1970; Barbara Davies quoted in Whittaker,
Striking a Balance, 96; See also: Barbara Davies and J. Clarence Davies III, Politics of Pollution
(Indianapolis: Pegasus, 1975).
23
20
million cars per year with prediction of ten million not far off.24 Consequently,
this industry became one of America’s biggest and better paying employers.
Automobile workers were among the best paid in American industry, averaging
more than $4 an hour plus company medical insurance, drug insurance, and
layoff pay pushing the total pay to about $5.6 an hour at the factories of General
Motors, Ford, and Chrysler.25
On the other hand, automobiles had become the main source of pollution
of the nation’s air. Automobiles had doubled in number between the 1950s and
the 1970s. During the 1950s Americans junked almost as many cars per year as
they manufactured. Cars were among the main contributors to contamination of
the nation’s air.
The internal combustion engine produced life threatening levels of
hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen oxide vehicular exhaust
emissions. Therefore, in certain urban areas polluted air decreased visibility and
irritated the eyes of the people.26 Consequently, automobile producers had
become the central character in the attacks of environmentalists. The American
public was unhappy with the auto industry and blamed it for polluting air,
New York Times, January 11, 1970.
New York Times, July 15, 1970.
26 Flippen, Nixon and the Environment, 4; Whittaker, Striking a Balance, 22.
24
25
21
killing people, destroying cities and accused it of only caring about profits.27
Nixon was aware of the significant role the automobile industry had in
sustaining a healthy economy yet he knew he needed to implement legislative
changes to satisfy members of a newly environmentally conscious population.
For this reason, with his back against the wall with these issues, Nixon decided
to take action to satisfy the majority of the American public as well as to protect
what he considered America’s most vital resource. In 1970 he once said, “Air is
our most vital resource, and its pollution is our most serious environmental
problem.”28
The President knew that he was going to have to sacrifice his relationship
with the auto industry in order to solve the problem of clean air and keep
environmentalists happy. But he started to take action in a very diplomatic way
by arguing that “there is no villain in this environmental problem, it comes not
from decisions taken but from decision neglected, not from malign intention, but
from failure to take into account the full consequences of our actions.”29 With this
statement Nixon wanted to make sure that his forthcoming environmental
legislation concerning clean air was not perceived as an attack on the auto
New York Times, April 2, 1970.
Public Papers of the Presidents, 1970, 100.
29 Public Papers of the Presidents, 1970, 96.
27
28
22
industry.
For this same reason he went as far as to praise the auto industry for
working on meeting the present federal emission standards, and on their own
initiative preparing to put on the market by 1972 automobiles which did not
require the use of leaded gasoline.30 He also made it clear that he was interested
in progress and a healthy economy while at the same time protecting the
environment. He did not see progress as environmentally damaging; he
considered that progress and a good economy could be kept while still
protecting the environment.31
Nixon was not an environmentalist nor was he a servant of corporate
interests. Although he supported the Clean Air Act of 1970 as well as many other
environmental initiatives, he judged that prosperity was a prerequisite to
reelection and that unemployment lost votes and elections. Nixon was not
radically pro-environment nor was he radically pro-business.32
Although determined to seek corporate support, caring for corporations
was not at the top of the President’s priorities. Nixon disliked businessmen, and
members of the eastern board elite, he said that the people of character were the
Public Papers of the Presidents, Richard M. Nixon, 1970, 102.
Public Papers of the Presidents, Richard M. Nixon, 1970, 96.
32Matusow, Nixon’s Economy, 4-9; Herbert S. Parmet, Richard M. Nixon: An American Enigma (New
York: Pearson Longman, 2008), 105.
30
31
23
labor leaders and that his source of strength was more main street than Wall
Street. Nixon was usually more concerned about how the public perceived his
policies than he was about passing them. He did not want to look like the older
Republican leaders that had lost so many elections in recent years, he wanted
people to see him as an enlightened centrist, a conservative man of liberal views,
not too liberal and not to conservative, therefore expanding the reach of his
government to benefit constituents and solve the nation’s problems. 33
This open-minded perspective allowed the President to make the
necessary choices in order to fight two battles, the one against air pollution as
well as the one against the biggest enemy of air pollution regulations, the
American automobile industry.
After signing the Clean Air Act of 1970, President Nixon left it to the EPA
to enforce this legislation diligently. William Ruckelshaus, administrator of the
EPA, promised strong enforcement. Because the Clean Air Act of 1970 stated
regulations that threatened the high levels of profitability the auto industry was
enjoying, executives of the industry decided to present themselves as victims and
to fight back.
Matusow, Nixon’s Economy, 9-12; James Rathlesberger, Nixon and the Environment: The Politics of
Devastation, Thirteen Essays (New York: Taurus Communications, 1972); Joan Hoff, Nixon
Reconsidered (New York: Basic Books, 1994), 21-26.
33
24
CHAPTER II
SIGNING THE CLEAN AIR ACT: THE FIRST BIG SHIFT IN BUSINESSGOVERNMENT RELATIONS OF THE NIXON ERA
The Clean Air Act of 1970 marked the start of the first big shift in business
government relations of the Nixon era. Clean air regulations were harsh on the
automobile industry as most air pollution came from the internal combustion
engine. In an effort to maintain high profitability and force the administration to
enforce legislation in a business friendly way, representatives of the major auto
corporations threatened to raise prices and eliminate jobs. This started a price
battle between the industry and the Nixon administration. For the president,
maintaining his position to protect the nation’s air and sponsoring economic
stability became determining factors that could guarantee reelection. Therefore,
Nixon decided to fight against the auto price increase while maintaining tough
regulations on the automotive industry.
On December 31, 1970 in the Roosevelt room in the White House, Richard
Nixon signed the Clean Air Act of 1970. In the presence of William Ruckelshaus,
25
eighteen administration officials, and members of the press, Nixon vowed strong
enforcement of the bill.
Also, after signing the Clean Air Act of 1970 and
standing in front of a Frederic Remington painting of the charge of the Rough
Riders at San Juan Hill, the President claimed, “This is the most important piece
of legislation, in my opinion, dealing with the problem of clean air that we have
this year and the most important in our history.”34
The Clean Air Act focused largely on providing procedures to enforce
regulations related to air quality standards and fuel emissions. After signing the
bill, Nixon claimed that if this bill was completely enforced, automobile
emissions would be reduced by 90 percent and then he observed, “the problem
of automobile pollution plagues all the great cities of this nation and most of the
great cities in the world have significant problems.”35
The auto industry did not take these declarations lightly as most of the
regulations put in place by the Clean Air Act directly affected their profitability.
After vividly trying to influence this legislation to their benefit since 1969
without positive results, auto companies faced a dramatic shift in the way clean
air laws regulated their proceedings. Compared to the 1967 Clean Air Act
Public Papers of the Presidents, Richard M. Nixon, 1970, Remarks on Signing the Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1970, 1166.
35 Ibid, 1167.
34
26
Amendments enacted during the Johnson administration, the 1970 Clean Air Act
Amendments were much broader in scope and more ambitious in their
objectives. Consequently, the bill turned into the source of a conflict that
challenged the entire social, economic, political, and environmental structure of
the nation.36
Prior to the Clean Air Act of 1970, automobile executives had enjoyed
business friendly environmental policies that added few costs. Since the early
1960s American business had played a uniquely important role in environmental
policy making. Business corporations had sought to create a business friendly
environmental policy which included little regulations and costs.
For instance, the Clean Air Act of 1967 aimed at regulating pollution but
provided insufficient Federal enforcement powers which prevented the
government from efficiently implementing these laws. For this reason, even with
the clean air legislation signed during the Lyndon B. Johnson Administration,
their profitability was not affected. The Clean Air Act of 1963 was a very business
friendly law which lacked specificity in terms of enforcement and methodology
to actually accomplish environmental goals. This lack of specificity was evident
in President Johnson’s statement right after signing the bill, “Now, under this
Public Law 91-604 (84 Stat. 1676) December 31, 1970.; See also: Voguel, Fluctuating Fortunes, 6979.
36
27
legislation, we can find ways to eliminate dangerous haze and smog.”37 The
purpose of this law was mainly to set some standards and “find ways” in which
smog could be reduced especially inside the big cities.
On the other hand, the Clean Air Act of 1970 established clear standards, a
specific method, and added to this, an enforcement agency. The Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) was in charge of enforcing Clean Air regulations
during the Nixon Administration. Prior to signing the Clean Air Act, Nixon had
decided that he wanted to restructure the government in a way that would make
it faster and more efficient. For this purpose he established the President’s
Advisory Council on Executive Organization which later came to be known as
the Ash Council.38
On April 20 1970, the ASH Council wrote a report to the President
recommending the formation of an Environmental Protection Administration to
repair the damage already done to the natural environment and to guide the
country into a better environmental era. The report stated that pollution was
Lyndon B. Johnson: "Remarks Upon Signing the Clean Air Act.," December 17, 1963. Online by
Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project.
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=264210.; See also: Public Law 88-206 (77 Stat. 392).
38 ASH Council: Out of Nixon’s concern over complicated governmental operations and his
search for orderly governing procedures, came the ASH Council. In April, 1969, almost
immediately after his election, the President appointed Roy L. Ash as the head to the President’s
Advisory Council on Executive Organization, also known as the Ash Council. The Council was
supposed to generate new ideas about executive reorganization. A few months later the Council
targeted six major areas for reorganization, the environment was one of them. See also: Joan Hoff,
Nixon Reconsidered, 50-76.
37
28
essentially a by-product of America’s vastly increased per capita consumption,
intensified by population growth, urbanization, and changing industrial
processes, and went further to inform that if nothing was done fast, problems of
environmental degradation would rise exponentially.39 According to the Ash
Council Memorandum, the environmental crisis was the result of America’s post
World War II prosperity and growth which involved a vast increase in the
number of automobiles used by Americans. 40
Consequently, on July 9, 1970, in a message to Congress transmitting his
plan to establish the agency the President said, “The creation of an
Environmental Protection Agency is necessary to increase the efficiency of the
operations of the government to the fullest extent possible.”41 With the creation
of this agency Nixon not only wanted to answer to the environmental crisis and
to his critics who argued that he was anti-environment but he was determined to
structure government in a way that would increase efficiency in dealing with the
current environmental crisis. He argued that with the creation of the EPA the
government would pull together into one agency a variety of research,
Ash Council Memorandum, April 29, 1970. Executive Office of the President. President’s
Advisory Council on Executive Organization. Washington, D.C. 20506, 1.
40 Council on Environmental Quality, First Annual Report (Washington D.C.: U.S Government
Printing Office, August 1970), 107-108; Marc K. Landy, Marc J. Roberts, Stephen R. Thomas, The
Environmental Protection Agency: Asking the Wrong Questions from Nixon to Clinton (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1994), 22-25; Flippen, Nixon and the Environment, 5-7.
41 Public Papers of the Presidents, Richard Nixon 1970, 578.
39
29
monitoring, standard-setting and enforcement activities now scattered through
several departments and organizations.42
Creating the EPA was one of Nixon’s most important environmental
policies as it provided the bureaucratic infrastructure to enforce regulations such
as the ones that were established in the Clean Air Act of 1970. The EPA, led by its
administrator, William Ruckelshaus, became the enforcer of clean air legislation
for the Nixon Administration and its toughness played a pivotal role in
establishing the start of a new era of business government relations in the United
States.
Auto executives such as Lynn A. Townsend (President of Chrysler
Corporation) were concerned over the enforcement of the Clean Air Act of 1970.
Although
auto
leaders
presented
themselves
as
representatives
of
environmentally friendly corporations, they tried to influence changes to the
clean air bill and the way the EPA was going to enforce it. For this purpose, they
used three main venues. The first one was related to their most valuable asset
and the most important political aspect for Nixon’s political future: influence in
the economy of the country. The second was a stipulation provided by the Clean
Air Act Amendments of 1970 which allowed them to ask for extensions if they
42
Ibid
30
found themselves in a position where they found it impossible to meet the 1975
emission standards; and the third one was a proposal made to change the federal
automotive standards of 1975-1976.
Although auto executives tried to influence this legislation before it was
signed into law, they did not take action as publicly as they could have.
Considering the strength of the environmental movement and the rise in public
concern over the environment, auto companies chose an approach which
appeared to be more environmentally friendly. They stated that they would try
to comply with the new emission standards. But as early as April of 1972,
Edward N. Cole, president of General Motors Corporation claimed that after
spending close to $182 million dollars in an attempt to clean up auto engines, his
company did not know if whether or not it was going to be able to meet the 19751976 standards the Clean Air Act required.
Subsequently, Cole went further to argue that the additional emission
control equipment needed to meet the 1975 standards would add $200 per
vehicle to the cost of 1975 models over and above 1973 costs.43
Considering automobiles had become a vital part of American life and
43
New York Times, April 2, 1972.
31
economy44, a price increase of $200 per car in a time when the Nixon
administration was struggling to stop inflation and stabilize the economy was an
enormous step back in the President’s plans for reelection. The President and his
advisors were concerned that the public was not aware of how much inflation
had slowed down during the last year. For this reason they decided to intervene
aggressively. The administration had foreseen that if the auto industry decided
not to raise prices as a result of government action, the administration could cite
this as evidence that inflation was decreasing.
Consequently, on August 1972, Donald Rumsfeld, head of the Cost of
Living Council summoned via telegram the four main auto manufacturers of the
country to Washington . The telegram read: “The President has directed that I
review your planned price increases with you, I will have my office contact you
to arrange a mutually convenient time.”45
After meeting with representatives from Ford Motors Corporation,
Chrysler Corporation, General Motors Corporation and American Motors
Corporation, a spokesman of the Cost of Living Council said that Rumsfeld had
asked each firm to cancel or moderate the price increase on 1973 automobiles. 46
Ten million cars were sold per year in the United States, and one million in the month of
October, 1971. New York Times, November 2, 1971.
45 New York Times August 16, 1972.
46 Ibid.
44
32
Later in 1972, Ford Motor Corporation requested more time before a
decision; General Motors announced that it was reducing its requested price
increase to $59 per car; and Chrysler Corporation and American Motors
Corporation refused to reduce the increase. Donald Rumsfeld reacted to the
decisions made by the corporations and made it clear that even though General
Motors had made the better choice, the administration still wanted zero price
increase: “We praise General Motors for going as far as it went, and we hope that
Ford is listening and will take us further down the road. We prefer a zero
increase.”47
The Nixon administration was urgently looking for a zero price increase
in automobiles which would be helpful for the economy as well as for the
president’s popularity. It was good for the administration if the public perceived
it as an active agent in the fight against inflation as well as a presidency that
could not be dominated by business interests. In August of 1972 Robert P.
Griffin, Republican senator of Michigan supported the administration and made
it look like the auto industry would not find an ally in the Republican Party
when he said: “In light of record sales and profits now enjoyed by the industry, I
believe it is reasonable to expect the industry to absorb some of the antipollution
47
New York Times August 23, 1972.
33
costs which have been imposed by Federal regulations.”48
Lynn A. Townsend, chairman of Chrysler Corporation was the first to
reply to these comments. Townsend argued that the Nixon administration’s
effort to talk the automobile industry out of price increases for 1973 was an
arbitrary and discriminatory request that was not compatible with the law. Then
he went further to claim that if the auto industry did not increase prices, it would
be forced to start to lay off workers therefore affecting the economy not only in
Detroit and Michigan where the main assembly lines were located, but in other
areas of the country that depended on the success of the auto industry.
The debate did not just stay between administration officials and the
industry executives. Leonard Woodcock, president of the United Automobile
Workers who had previously complained by saying that the Clean Air Act was
too soft on the auto industry, publicly supported the Nixon administration in the
price battle by claiming that higher auto prices would lead to reduced sales and
reduced production which would lead to fewer jobs for auto workers. Auto
executives held their ground and said that the price hike was only to pay for the
administration’s new environmental regulations and that it was impossible for
them to increase the volume of sales to a point that would allow them to absorb
48
New York Times, August 25, 1972.
34
the loss.49
The Nixon administration and the auto industry held a price battle as a
result of the President’s commitment to enforce the Clean Air Act Amendments
of 1970. This was the beginning of a new era of environmental regulations
especially for the auto industry. The era was characterized by tough policies and
stronger and better organized enforcement. The result was the aggressive
attempt of automobile corporations to manipulate politicians by threatening to
increase prices or fire employees. But the administration held its ground and the
United Automobile Workers got publicly involved in support of the government
and the end result was an auto price freeze.
In September of 1972, the Price Commission, an institution responsible for
keeping inflation under control, ruled that the automobile corporations did not
qualify for any price increase in its 1973 models to cover for the extra cost of
government ordered antipollution improvements. This decision was not based
on any political grounds; instead, the Price Commission stated that approval of
the requested price increases would widen the companies’ profit margins in
violation of price control standards.50
Losing the price battle was the type of event that big business
49
50
New York Times, August 27, 1972; See also: Solidarity Magazine, September 1972.
New York Times, September 3, 1972.
35
corporations were not used to in the United States prior to the early 1970s.
Considering business groups were accustomed to being leading players in the
policy making process, in shaping public debate and in influencing the
formulation, adoption and implementation of regulatory laws. The price battle
defeat was among the first losing occurrences the automobile industry had to
face during the new era of business government relations but not the last one.
The main characteristic of the new period of business government
relations of the Nixon era was an ideological shift in the nation. This shift placed
large amounts of pressure on the Nixon Administration to commit to the
enforcement of the laws it had approved. The ideological shift was the driving
force behind the Administration as well as the Environmental Protection Agency
in their quest to clean the nation’s air.
In spite of the public’s support for tough enforcement of environmental
regulations, and losing the price battle, the automobile industry continued to try
to find ways to secure its high levels of profitability. For this purpose they
decided to use the leeway that the Clean Air Act of 1970 provided.
According to the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1970, if the automobile
corporations were trying in good faith to improve their technology to meet the
1975 standards, the law allowed them to ask for a one year extension. When
36
these corporations presented their case and applied for the extension, William
Ruckelshaus, administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, rejected
their request.
Consequently, the auto industry decided to unite and sue the
Environmental Protection Agency and Ruckelshaus. This lawsuit was brought to
the United States Court of Appeals in the District of Columbia Circuit by
International Harvester Company (truck manufacturer), General Motors
Corporation, Chrysler Corporation, and Ford Motor Company.51
In the lawsuit the companies were seeking a review of the decision by the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency. They claimed that they
had been diligent in trying to meet the standards but considering the amount of
changes that needed to be done, it was impossible for the car manufacturers to
shift production from large number of previous models and engine types to
those capable of complying with the 1975 standards and meeting national
demand for new cars.52
After losing the price battle and feeling the effects of the shift in business
government relations, auto executives decided to use other ways to attempt to
shape environmental legislation to their benefit. One of these ways was going to
51
52
78 F.2d 615, 155 U.S.App.D.C. 411
478 F.2d 615, 155 U.S.App.D.C. 411
37
court. Ford Motor Corporation, Chrysler, General Motors, and International
Harvester joined forces and sued the EPA. After suing the EPA and not obtaining
the desired results, Chrysler executives acted as representatives of the industry
and wrote an official proposal to the Nixon administration to change Clean Air
legislation.
38
CHAPTER III
THE AUTOMOBILE INDUSTRY AND THE PROLONGED FIGHT AGAINST
CLEAN AIR REGULATIONS
After losing the price battle, representatives of the auto industry carried
on with their attempts to twist clean air policy to their benefit. As they realized
that Nixon was deeply committed to enforce clean air regulations diligently, auto
corporations found two other ways to continue to protect their high levels of
profitability and force the administration to make the desired changes. The first
was to sue the EPA. Once the lawsuit did not bring the desired results, auto
executives wrote an official proposal as a desperate attempt to change the law in
their favor. But the administration, in this case represented by the EPA, did not
retract from its position; instead, it continued to make sure the problem of clean
air was resolved.
On May 12 1972, in a written statement concerning the denial of the
application of the automobile industries for an extension of the deadline to meet
39
emission standards, William Ruckelshaus, said: “there is no question but what
there will be some concern on the part of the automobile manufacturer about this
decision, but let’s see what everyone’s options are.” Then he stated: “if I were
sitting in the position of the automobile manufacturer, my first option would be
to try to meet the standards which would obviously keep the automobile
companies open; the second option is if they are convinced that I am wrong as
apparently they are, and that the technology is not available, and that the
evidence in record indicates it is not available, they have the option of going to
court to prove that; the third option is that they can make a best-systems choice.
They can contract with the catalyst manufacturers to make available by 1975, or
the 1975 model automobiles, the catalytic systems.”53
Ruckelshaus’ toughness certainly challenged already distressed auto
executives and best represents environmental regulatory efforts enacted in
response to the ideological shift of the nation and the environmental crisis.
Accordingly, on December 18, 1972 after losing the price battle and facing
the non- approval for an extension on the emission standards required by the
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1970, the auto industry decided to use a different
venue to accomplish what it wanted, this venue was Ruckelshaus’ second option,
William Ruckelshaus. Statement on Denying the Application to Extend Emission Standards. Box
CFSU 31 Folder EX HE 9-1
53
40
going to court.
In the lawsuit brought to the United States Court of Appeals in the District
of Columbia Circuit, International Harvester Company (truck manufacturer),
General Motors Corporation, Chrysler Corporation, and Ford Motor Company
sought the review of the decision Ruckelshaus had made of not approving the
application for an extension to meet the 1975 standards.
Representatives of the automobile corporations argued that they had been
diligent in trying to meet the standards but considering the amount of changes
that needed to be done, it was impossible for the car manufacturers to shift
production from large numbers of previous models and engine types to those
capable of complying with the standards and meeting national demand for new
cars.54
Another argument that the auto companies presented was based on a
recent study the National Academy of Science had made. The study revealed that
technology was not available to meet the standards of 1975 and therefore
demanded a “reasoned decision” from the Environmental Protection Agency on
the application for a one year extension of 1975 emission standards. 55
EPA administrator replied to auto industry arguments with conviction.
54
55
478 F.2d 615, 155 U.S.App.D.C. 411
Ibid.
41
First, he stated that the studies of the National Academy of Science did not
necessarily bind the Environmental Protection Agency in order to consider the
one year extensions. Then he went further to observe that the auto industry had
not worked hard enough to meet the 1975 standards. Ruckelshaus supported this
statement by saying that for the first two years after the Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1970 were signed into law, the auto industry had “dragged
their feet” and that the Japanese auto industry had been diligent and had found a
way to meet the 1975 standards. Then he added that the Japanese auto industry
had offered to show them the technology they had been able to find.56
The law suit ended in another defeat for the auto industry. The Court of
Appeals stated that it could not order a one year extension for the 1975 standards
as Congress had determined the proper procedure and circumstances under
which such extensions could be provided and the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency was the only one who could decide on these
matters. This was an important moment for William Ruckelshaus as well as for
the Nixon Administration as public opinion reacted favorably to their hardhitting standing towards the auto industry and made an even stronger statement
Ibid.; William D. Ruckelshaus recorded interview by Timothy J. Naftali and Paul Milazzo, 12
April
2007, the Richard Nixon Oral History Project of the Richard Nixon Presidential
Library and Museum.
56
42
than it did by winning the price battle. It showed the auto industry how somber
the change of business-government relations had become.57
After losing in court, representatives of the auto industry were surprised
but not defeated. Even though the Environmental Protection Agency showed no
sign of backing down and the federal government either, they kept fighting to
turn things around in a way that would benefit them. For this reason, they
decided to propose changes or “alternatives” to the Clean Air Act Amendments
of 1970.
In January of 1973, Lynn A. Townsend, chairman of the board of Chrysler
Corporation started to contact John D. Ehrlichman, assistant to the President for
domestic affairs, in order to convince him that the auto emission standards set by
the Clean Air Act Amendments were unrealistic and therefore should be
changed to more possible ones. In the statements Townsend sent Mr.
Ehrlichman, Chrysler Corporation carefully included a summary of pertinent
and current medical evidence, an analysis of the method used to calculate the
necessary degree of reduction in automotive emissions, and a review of the
recent study by the National Academy of Sciences on the industry’s ability to
meet the standards as they were written at that moment. All of this information
57
478 F.2d 615, 155 U.S.App.D.C. 411
43
was put together in a way that would influence government officials. The
statement concluded that the evidence summarized in the document showed that
the reductions in automotive emissions should be partially changed in order to
protect the public health and welfare in all parts of the country. 58
In the document Lynn Towsend sent to Mr. Ehrlichman, he went further
to state that if the administration made changes to the legislation, the auto
industry would commit to meet the standards, especially if one of the changes
was to move the deadline to 1977 model cars. Townsend also argued that making
changes to the Clean Air Act Amendments would avoid cost penalties for the
consumer and for the economy which were something no one wanted. The
introductory letter to the document ends with the following statement by Lynn
Townsend: “We are hopeful that after carefully examining the facts that are now
available, the Congress will act on this information and replace present
standards with new ones which will protect the environment while conserving
our country’s resources.”59
In March of 1973, Chrysler sent a document entitled Position Statement by
Chrysler Corporation on the Health Effects of Automobile Emissions to the office of
Memorandum from Lynn A. Townsend to John D. Herlichman, Box CFSU HE33 Folder BEN HE9-1
Air Pollution
59 Ibid.
58
44
John D. Ehrlichman. This document represented the company’s last desperate
effort to try to change the law. In this document Chrysler boldly claimed that the
“requirements of the 1970 Clean Air Act should be suspended and the law
revised”60 and that the proposal was very urgent in light of the additional new
body of evidence detailing the extreme cost penalty of the federal standards,
their drain on the nation’s natural resources, and their effect on the country’s
trade. Chrysler further observed that their intention was not to stop controls on
air pollution but to propose reasonable pollution control.
In the same document, Chrysler representatives claimed that reasonable
pollution control could be accomplished if the standards were lowered to the
point that they just ensured the safeguard of the public’s health and welfare
instead of making them so low that they threatened the entire American
economic system. This claim was followed by a statement in which Chrysler
tried to convince Mr. Ehrlichman that the reason why the Clean Air Act of 1970
was so tough and radical and overlooked so many scientific facts, was because
Congress had reacted to the country’s sense of urgency about the environmental
problems that had peaked around the time the Act was signed into law.61
Position Statement of Chrysler Corporation on the Health Effects of Automotive Emissions. Box CFSU
HE33 Folder BEN HE9-1 Air Pollution.
61 Ibid. 6.
60
45
According to Chrysler, the problem with the Clean Air Act was not only
that it was not based on thorough research but that it was limited in scope. This
legislation, as it was approved in Congress, wanted to establish a national
environmental strategy which would protect people everywhere from all the
possible effects of all emissions. By doing this, Chrysler observed, legislators
failed to recognize the fact that the air quality problem varied in different parts of
the country. Therefore emission control standards should be designed to protect
the public health and welfare in the part of the country that clearly has the worst
possible problem, and then extend as needed to the rest of the country.62
Another argument Chrysler representatives made in their attempt to
change the Clean Air Act was that automotive emissions were a small
contributor to the nation’s air quality problem. The corporation supported this
statement based on a concept they called “relative harmfulness.” The rationale
behind this concept was that air pollution varied from one location to another
depending on the concentrations of emissions from factories, automobiles, home
furnaces and fireplaces and if this was taken into account, then automobile
emissions were not responsible in its entirety for air pollution problems in highly
populated and highly urbanized areas. Added to this, if the Congress considered
62
Ibid. 4,5
46
that about 75 percent of the population lived on only 1.5 percent of the available
land, then motor vehicles were responsible for only 10 to 12 percent of the entire
country’s air quality problem.63
Chrysler’s position statement illustrates how diligent, confident and far
reaching American corporations were in their attempts to influence policy
changes. Even in the midst of what can be considered a new era of businessgovernment relations, the auto industry invested time and financial resources to
make a strong case against the essential implementation of the Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1970. Because they had lost the price battle and they had lost in
court, they realized that the only way to turn the situation to their favor and get
what they wanted was by changing the law. For environmentalists, workers,
students and people around the country this would be close to impossible, but
for big corporations this was viable option based on the way the were
accustomed to negotiate with the government during previous administrations.
Added to this, Chrysler tacitly criticized the Congress for being
shortsighted and blamed it for any future economic misfortunes that could
happen in the future. The position statement that Chrysler Corporation sent to
John D. Ehrlichman in early 1973 serves as a case study of the efforts automobile
63
Ibid. 3
47
corporations were desperately making during this era to shape policy and
therefore control the implementation of laws that could affect their profitability.
On the other hand, environmentalists and other sectors of the American
population continued to pressure the Nixon administration for tough
implementation of the Clean Air Act which in many cases was considered
“weak” on the auto industry. Representatives of the United Auto Workers
claimed that the bill was not strong enough to hold back the automobile industry
from further contaminating the nation’s air and environmentalists claimed that
Ruckelshaus and other administration spokesmen “usually talk tough in public,
but what’s said behind closed doors is anyone’s guess.”64
The pressure the auto industry placed on the Administration and the
criticism coming from environmentalists did not move Ehrlichman. Instead, he
asked the President to continue to trust Ruckelshaus regarding his interpretation
and enforcement of the Clean Air Act of 1970. Ehrlichman remarked that
Ruckelshaus actions reflected what the majority of the people wanted and
changing these laws would affect the credibility of the Administration in regards
to environmental issues.
For this reason, on April 18 1973, President Nixon wrote a letter to
64
Rathlesberger, Nixon and the Environment, 23; Dewey, Working for the Environment, 57-58.
48
William Ruckelshaus congratulating him for his work as the administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency. Nixon encouraged him to make sure to “not
simply coast on our earlier momentum, but with a renewed drive toward
excellence in Government.”65 Also, the President wrote Ruckelshaus that he was
interested in receiving new policy initiatives, and improvements which could be
made in current programs. 66 The President’s support to the actions of the
Environmental Protection Agency made a strong impression in the public but the
automobile companies claimed they were the victims in this process.
The automobile industry had been complaining since April of 1972 that it
was singled out to receive extraordinary pressure from the government, this
pressure affected operations and profitability. Industry leaders argued that labor
costs, low productivity, and import threat added to government demands for
pollution control were problems which had to be solved as they still needed to
make reasonable profits in order to prevent an industry recession.
As the Nixon administration considered these claims in 1973, it concluded
that the demands it was placing on the auto industry were necessary and valid.
Necessary because it was in the best interest of the United States Government to
Memorandum for Honorable William D. Ruckeshaus, Administrator Environmental Protection Agency.
Box 5 CFSU FG. 566. Folder Ex FG 298 EPA
66 Ibid.
65
49
stand by the laws which they had previously passed and valid because the
American automobile corporations had been some of the primary beneficiaries of
Nixon’s new economic legislations set forth in August of 1971. These economic
policies had eliminated auto excise taxes, given tax breaks on capital investment
and discouraged importation of foreign cars, first by the 10 percent import
surcharge and later by devaluation of the dollar.67
By the end of 1972 and the first few days of 1973 it seemed like the
President was fully on the side of the environment. Nixon’s environmental
policies to clean the nation’s air had been passed and the Environmental
Protection Agency was enforcing them diligently. This marked a new era of
business-government relations in which the industries that were high
contributors to the problem of air pollution were forced to sacrifice profits and to
comply with regulations that looked to ensure the health of the American
population. As a result, the general public as well as academics from different
disciplines started to argue that Nixon was an environmentalist.
William Ruckelshaus had a different perspective. In an interview with
historian Paul Milazzo in 2007 he stated that the environment was never a matter
close to Nixon’s heart like it was the case for Ronald Reagan whom he
67
New York Times, August 23, 1972.
50
considered a true environmentalist. Instead, he added, Nixon’s main interests
were connected to foreign policy. Ruckelshaus claimed that the “irony” of having
so many environmental accomplishments during a conservative administration
was due to the demand of the public.68 Ruckelshaus’ claims about Nixon and the
environment seem accurate especially when analyzing the environmental
developments related to clean air policy after April of 1973.
The first few months of 1973 were a time when it seemed like the Nixon
administration was absolutely committed to the cause of the environment. The
auto industry had failed in its various attempts to transform clean air regulations
into business friendly legislation. By April, 1973 as most environmentalists
started to feel satisfied with the president’s efforts to clean the nation’s air, the
administration started the second big shift in business government relations of
the Nixon era. The energy crisis and clean air regulations placed the auto
industry in a difficult financial situation. For this reason, President Nixon
decided to focus on the economic stability of the nation and threw environmental
concerns to the wind.
William D. Ruckelshaus recorded interview by Timothy J. Naftali and Paul Milazzo, 12 April
2007.
68
51
CHAPTER IV
FROM THE CLEAN AIR ACT TO THE ENERGY ACT OF 1974: THE SECOND
BIG SHIFT IN BUSINESS GOVERNMENT RELATIONS OF THE NIXON ERA
The year 1973 marked the start of the second big shift in business
government relations of the Nixon era. Flexibility and little enforcement of
environmental regulations characterized the new era. In an effort to rescue the
economy and respond to the energy crisis, President Nixon decided to amend the
Clean Air Act of 1970. With significantly less pressure to address environmental
problems but still with opposition from Edmund Muskie, Nixon eased
environmental regulations on the automobile industry. Because reelection and
the environment were no longer matters of concern for the American people,
Nixon decided to focus on economic issues. Therefore the president proposed the
Energy Supply and Environmental Coordination Act of 1974. This act was a
response to the energy crisis and a way to give the auto industry the benefits of a
more business friendly administration.
In an environmental address to Congress in 1973, Nixon declared that the
52
environmental crisis was over when he said, “When we came to office in 1969,
we tackled this problem with all the power at our command. Now there is
encouraging evidence that the United States has moved away from the
environmental crisis that could have been and a new era of restoration and
renewal.” Although the President did not cite the evidence to support his claims,
he further argued, “Today, I can report to Congress that we are well on our way
to peace with nature.” After making these statements, he continued to introduce
some of the guiding principles the President considered to be fundamental in
order to continue to build on the administration’s current environmental success.
The President argued that balance between economic growth and
environmental protection was one of his main goals for this new period and that
“State and local governments had to take the lead with meeting the costs.”
Nixon’s statements in this address show a sense of confidence in the
administration’s accomplishments in dealing with the environmental crisis as
well as a sense of preoccupation with budgetary issues that he knew were
coming his way.69 Added to budgetary problems, troubles related to the energy
crisis started to surface and public interest in environmental issues declined
therefore creating an entirely different context for Nixon.
Council on Environmental Quality, The President’s Environmental Program (Washington D.C.:
U.S Government Printing Office, 1973), 3-12.
69
53
This new group of circumstances relieved Nixon from some of the
pressures he had faced in 1969-1970 when he signed the Clean Air Act
Amendments. Consequently, Nixon decided to refocus on his popularity which
was mainly attached to the economic wellbeing of the people of the United
States.70
In 1973, an energy crisis significantly affected various sectors of the
American economy. With the Arab embargo and the sudden rise in imported oil
prices, the automobile industry faced new challenges which directly affected
their profitability. This led to a strong reaction from these corporations against
the government especially in terms of attacks to the current environmental
regulations set in place through the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1970. The
companies started a fuming public relations campaign to persuade the American
public into believing that environmental regulations would cost them money
because these laws were going to cause a rise in price per unit of as much as one
thousand dollars.71
By November of 1973, the energy crisis was squeezing the auto industry
from two directions. The first one was shortages of power for making cars and
70
71
Flippen, Nixon and the Environment, 191.
New York Times, November 6, 1973
54
the second one was shortages of gasoline to drive them. Ford Motor Company
was forced to stop production in a new plant in Cleveland because of lack of fuel
for paint ovens. Consequently, Ford asked the United States Interior Department
for help in obtaining gas so it could open once again. Added to this, Ford was
studying how to cut hours of operation in other plants which would lead to the
loss of a big number of jobs and ultimately affect the financial prosperity Nixon
was so worried about since his first term.72
The energy crisis also forced the automobile industry to change the design
of most of its cars and in the case of some of the companies to create new ones.
Roy D. Chapin Jr., the chairman of American Motors Corporation observed that
this company had to produce a new small model by 1975 because “We have
already seen people are trying to get rid of high horse power, big cars because
they anticipate there’s going to be some kind of restraint on gasoline.”73 On the
other hand, Ford was planning to redesign its compact cars like the Maverick
and the Comet for 1975 and General Motors was also working on its compacts
such as the Chevrolet Nova, the Pontiac Ventura and the Oldsmobile Omega.74
Designing new and smaller cars was a novel and costly challenge for the
New York Times, November 8, 1973
New York Times, November 9, 1973
74 Ibid.
72
73
55
industry but corporate officials were determined nonetheless to succeed in the
midst of a new era of business-government relations and an energy crisis. They
addressed these problems not only by trying to change environmental
regulations and turn them to their favor but also by producing low gasoline
consuming cars. William Mitchell, vice-president of design for General Motors
claimed: “This eight to ten miles per gallon is not going to continue.”75
Problems for the automobile industry appeared to enlarge and deepen as
the year 1973 progressed. According to Ford energy planner William A.
McNamee, who had recently been named, more than a dozen Ford assembly and
manufacturing plants had no assured supply of fuel for the winter. McNamee
further claimed that he feared that some of these plants may have to close at one
time or another. In addition, Mobil Oil Corporation said that because of reduced
supplies of crude oil, it was reducing allocations of gasoline throughout the
country for the last two months of the year. Because of all these issues, auto
corporations saw one of the biggest declines in their stock values during the
month of November, 1973. 76
General Motors’ stock had reached a yearly high of about $84 before it fell
to $59 on November 9, of 1973. Ford Motors Corporation’s yearly high was
75
76
New York Times November 8, 1972
Ibid.
56
similar to General Motors’ at $82 before it fell to $48 on November 9. Chrysler’s
stock dropped almost 50 percent from its yearly high at $44 dollars to $20 dollars
on November 9, and American Motors Corporation saw the lowest decrease rate
from nine dollars to eight dollars. American Motors faced the lowest drop in the
industry mainly because of its creativity and swift initiative to design and
produce smaller cars such as the Gremlin which proved to be a successful
product for them during this era.77
In the midst of this crisis, Nixon’s initial response to the auto companies
was not necessarily very helpful. Nixon claimed that if the industry implemented
a strategy of reduction in plant operating time, they would be able to meet the
very critical question of availability of fuel. On the other hand, the auto industry
stated that if they decided to cut plant operation time, jobs would be lost and it
would be impossible for them to produce the amount of cars needed in order to
continue to be profitable and pay for the costs they were facing due to the
implementation of clean air regulations.
By December of 1973, the oil crisis, and the big shift in business
government relations seemed to be severely affecting the automobile
corporations across the country. Considering these developments had become so
77
New York Times, November 10, 1973.
57
important in the United States as they were affecting what had become one of the
most important industries in the country; and that the environment had ceased
to be a topic of absolute emergency for the American people, Nixon started to
reconsider the pro-environment robustness with which his Administration had
addressed the problem of air pollution.
Considering the problems with the national economy, the oil crisis, and
Nixon’s growing concern over popularity and reelection, the President once
again looked at a study he had requested from the Department of Commerce a
year before on the impact of environmental laws on the economy. Study authors
reported that environmental regulations would push one-quarter of 1 percent in
unemployment, boost prices 0.5 percent, and diminish GNP 0.5 percent over a
period of four years.78
If what the report projected was accurate, some 400 to 700 plants would be
closed and more than 135,000 jobs would disappear. On a national scale these
numbers may have not been too dreadful but what was important about them
was the geographical location of the people that would be affected. According to
the study, the negative effects of Nixon’s environmental laws would center on
The Economic Impact of Pollution Control: A Report Prepared for the President by the Department of
Commerce, March, 1972. Folder “Environmental Economics,” Materials-Vol. II, Box 132 WHCF,
RNPMP.
78
58
certain key geographical areas like the Great Lakes. Added to this, small
businesses would be unable to afford the high cost of pollution abatement
technologies and equipment.79
In a time when the automobile industry was experiencing one of the most
difficult periods in business government relations and the oil crisis was highly
threatening its profitability, President Richard Nixon, who had much less
pressure from environmentalists than he had in 1969 and 1970 when he signed
the Clean Air Act, decided to initiate another big shift in business-government
relations. Nixon chose to help the auto industry by proposing amendments to the
Clean Air Act of 1970.
In early 1974, after recommending in his energy message to the Congress a
two year delay on stricter emission standards for automobiles, President Nixon
asked Ken Cole, assistant to the President in domestic affairs, to develop a
legislative package to remove environmental restraints to increase energy
supplies. Nixon considered that the major enveloping energy constraining law
that was affecting the country in various areas of the economy was the Clean Air
Act.
In a memorandum for the President from Ken Cole dated March 5, 1974
79
Ibid.
59
and entitled Clean Air Act Amendments, the author made the following statement:
“In response to your directive that we develop a legislative package to remove
environmental constraints to increasing energy supplies, we have worked with
the Office of Management and Budget, The Federal Energy Office and the
Environmental Protection Agency on a package of amendments to the Clean Air
Act.”80 This statement reflects the priority given by the administration to acting
towards the financial recovery of the country which mainly involved the
industries affected by the energy crisis. Presidential aide Ken Cole added the
following phrase at the end of the memorandum: “we need to have these
amendments on the Hill as soon as possible.”81
The amendments proposed in the memorandum presented an entirely
new scenario for the automobile industry and instituted the beginning of a much
more flexible stage of business-government relations.
The 1974 amendments Ken Cole proposed after consulting with the OMB,
the EPA and the FEO included a package of reforms to the current bill that gave
the auto industry a much wider range of possibilities to delay its responsibility to
meet the 1975 emission standards. Cole’s memorandum to the President
New York Times January 24, 1974; Memorandum to the President from Ken Cole, March 5, 1974. Box
CFSU HE 31. Folder (EX) HE 9-1, 1
81 Ibid.
80
60
expressed the desire of the administration to give the EPA authority to extend for
two years the 1975 emission standards for automobile manufacturers and extend
compliance dates beyond current statutory deadlines for stationary sources (like
power plants).82
Russell Train, the incoming director of the EPA (after the President had
appointed William Ruckelshaus to head of the FBI) did not support the proposed
amendments. According to Train, the amendments would rescind legislation that
was enacted to protect the air quality of the nation. In a memorandum to the
President in March, 1974 Train claimed that the proposed amendments would
create a public impression that economic considerations were being given new
and undue emphasis and therefore adjustments needed to be made. At the end
of the memorandum he clearly summarized his statement when he said: “We
should not create the impression that we put dollars above human health and
lives.”83
Ken Cole reacted to Train’s statements by recommending the President
should meet with him and carefully convince him of the importance and urgency
of the situation and insure his personal support for the package. Cole considered
Ibid, 2-3.
Memorandum to the President, Clean Air Act Amendments. March 1, 1974. Box CFSU HE 31. Folder
(EX) HE 9-1,
82
83
61
that Train’s personal support for these amendments was pivotal as he was the
director of the EPA. According to Cole, President Nixon should convince Train
by explaining to him his “substantive and political reasons for making these
decisions”84 as Train was the one who would have the leading role in this
legislative shift. Consequently, Nixon wrote a letter to Russell Train in which he
said: “It is particularly important that you continue your efforts to balance our
environmental goals with our energy needs.”85
As shown by Nixon’s requests to Ken Cole and Russell Train, economic
pressures initiated mainly by the energy crisis and how this emergency was
affecting the auto industry and the entire American economic system, Nixon
decided to modify his views and commitment to the environment. The American
public was not as concerned for the environment as it had been during the late
1960’s and early 1970’s, and the good political decision as Nixon always thought
was to have a healthy economy.
For these reasons, out of political expediency, in late March of 1974, Nixon
initiated a new era, once again, of business government relations. In a cabinet
meeting Nixon ordered, “Promote energy developments, Get off the
Ibid, 3.
Memorandum, Richard Nixon to Russell Train, March 22, 1974. Folder EX FG 298, EPA Box 2, EPA
Files.
84
85
62
environmental kick.”86
This new era of business government relations was characterized by
diminished attention to environmental regulation. No longer could the
administration afford politically or economically the cost of the environmental
policies that had been enacted through the Clean Air Act of 1970. Nixon’s new
proposals related to Clean Air starting in March of 1974 were solely intended to
facilitate energy supply, promote economic stability, and assist the auto industry
through the current crisis.
Under the new policies power plants were encouraged to convert from oil
to coal, the nation’s most abundant energy source even at the cost of air quality.
The smoke, ash, sulfur, and particulate matter that spewed out of smokestacks,
as bad as they were, would not be a problem as the new laws would grant EPA
the authority to suspend sulfur oxide emission limits. Added to this,
transportation control plans which had been part of the 1970 Clean Air Act
would change as the EPA would receive authority to extend the date for cities to
attain air quality standards for up to 10 years in metropolitan areas where a
significant reduction in motor vehicle use would be necessary to achieve
standards (i.e Los Angeles).
86
“Meetings File, Beginning March 24, 1973.” Box 94, President Office Files, WHSF, RNPMP.
63
Another aspect of the 1970 Clean Air Act that would change was
penalties. Under the 1970 Act violation of air quality requirements could lead to
criminal penalties but with the new policies it would lead to civil penalties. The
sector that would benefit the most from the new amendments that the
Administration was about to send to Congress was the automotive companies.
With the new package they would receive two years of grace for development of
new emission control technology which would allow them to focus on
improving fuel economy and recover from the financial toll environmental laws
and the energy crisis had taken on them.87
As the Nixon administration had expected, environmentalists led by
Senator Edmund Muskie reacted against the proposed amendments. Muskie
opposed the legislation by arguing that the only reason the Administration
wanted to amend the Clean Air Act of 1970 was the oil crisis. He claimed as well
that the oil crisis was a “phony issue” and that it was only about the “antagonists
using the issue.”88 Muskie’s efforts were not able to stop the Administration’s
determination to amend the Clean Air Act of 1970. Instead, in June 1974, the
Congress, sharing the Administration’s urgency to address the energy crisis
Administration’s Clean Air Act Amendments. . Box CFSU HE 31. Folder (EX) HE 9-1, 1
Interview, J. Brooks Flippen with Leon Billings (Aid to Muskie in coordinating work on
environmental policy), June 26, 1998.
87
88
64
approved the amendments to the Clean Air Act of 1970 and passed the Energy
Supply and Environmental Coordination Act of 1974.
The statement of purpose found in this legislation reflects the cause for the
second big shift in business-government relations of the Nixon era as it stated
that the main issue these new laws attempted to address was “meeting the
essential needs of the United States for fuels.”89 Evidently, the Administration’s
position had changed from pro-environment to pro-energy.
This second big shift in business-government relations came about as a
consequence of the energy crisis and the demise of public interest in
environmental issues. After Congress passed the Energy Supply and
Environmental Coordination Act of 1974, the automobile industry started to
recover and enjoyed the benefits of a more business friendly administration.
89
P.L. 93-319 (88 Stat. 246), June 22, 1974.
65
CONCLUSION
President Richard Nixon was responsible for two major shifts in businessgovernment relations that affected the automobile industry. This industry was
one of the most important for the American economy during the 1960s and
1970s; auto manufacturers and suppliers employed countless Americans. Auto
companies also built one of the most important consumer goods for the
American people since the 1950s.
The first big shift was related to the environmental crisis that became
widely popular especially since Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring. Millions of people
from all areas of the population wrote letters to the President and placed a
significant amount of pressure on the Administration to solve the problem. This
forced Nixon to propose and implement hard-hitting environmental regulations
that affected the private sector’s economic interests particularly in the case of the
auto industry when the President signed the Clean Air Act of 1970. In spite of
intense confrontations between the Administration and the auto industry, the
President did not change his position initially.
66
These first two years of Nixon’s presidency have led historians and
political analysts to argue that he was an environmentalist and that he was a
liberal president. These arguments come from the premise that Nixon was a man
of principles and strong political convictions. But the developments related to
environmental policy, clean air, and the auto industry show something different.
These developments present the picture of a President who was only after
popularity. For Nixon popularity was about maintaining a healthy economy and
about providing Americans with what they sought.
In 1969, when Nixon
became president, the main issue was the environment. Therefore Nixon took
action and regardless of his own personal convictions or political views he
insisted in going in the direction that would make him popular. There was an
environmental “hysteria” during the first two years of Nixon’s Presidency and
even in the midst of it the President always said that he would continue to
address environmental issues as long as it did not affect the American economy.
Popularity and a healthy economy were the two most important guidelines
Nixon followed throughout his Presidency.
By early 1973, the second big shift in business-government relations of the
Nixon era took place. The American public was not as concerned about the
environment as it had been during the 1960’s and the first two years of the 1970s.
67
Added to this, there was an energy crisis which had affected the auto industry
and therefore the American economy. For these reasons, Nixon decided to
reconsider his commitment to the environment and stepped away from the
rough environmental regulations he had put in place at the height of the
environmental crisis through the Clean Air Act of 1970.
In early 1973, Nixon proposed thirteen amendments to the Clean Air Act
of 1970. These amendments addressed issues related to the energy crisis but most
importantly, they were intended to loosen up the harsh environmental
regulations that were affecting the auto industry’s profitability. In June of 1974
the Congress passed the Energy Supply and Environmental Coordination Act of
1974 which included Nixon’s thirteen amendments to the Clean Air Act of 1970.
These amendments took environmental regulations related to clean air and the
auto industry back to being similar to what they were before the environmental
crisis of the 1960s.
Richard Nixon’s Presidency was influenced by multiple crises. Nixon had
to work on solving not only the environmental crisis and the energy crisis but
also the Vietnam War and a financial crisis. In the midst of all this Nixon did not
remain faithful to any political or personal ideology or principle. Nixon was a
cold pragmatist a pursuer of creating a stable economy and being President for
68
more than one term.
This makes Nixon much more complex and attention–grabbing than
historians once thought. As a conservative President, he supported various
liberal policies (among which was the environment) and was never under the
control of the business sector. Nixon’s most fundamental commitment was to his
reelection.
Based on a study of Nixon’s Presidency and environmental policies
related to clean air, the ideas that Nixon was pro-environment or pro-business or
liberal or conservative do not really apply. Rather, Nixon was cold pragmatist
only committed to popularity a healthy economy and reelection.
Historians who wrote prior to the mid to late 1980’s allowed the
Watergate scandal to overshadow the field. As a consequence, the idea that
Nixon was a bad President dominated the scholarly debates. From the 1970’s to
the 1980’s the preconceived idea of Nixon as a bad President influenced scholars
of the time and led them to concentrate their studies of the Nixon presidency on
topics like conspiracies, burglaries, plans for kidnapping, blackmail, and
obstruction of justice. Les Evans and Allen Myers looked at the Nixon presidency
and only tried to find an explanation for his mistakes completely overlooking
other aspects of the Administration. They argued that this presidency took place
69
during a time of war in which wiretapping, intelligence, and espionage were
used in many different ways. Consequently, Nixon who was a man of his time,
decided to utilize these elements available to him to stay in power.
Scholars like Mollenhoff, Mankiewicz, Lehman James, and Buckton James
agreed with this argument but emphasized on how much the Nixon crimes had
affected the American political system. Mollenhoff argued that Watergate
brought light on the fact that America could be an easy prey for a president set
on dictatorship. Mankiewicz, Judson Lehman James, Dorothy Buckton James,
Les Evans and Allen Mayers all agreed with the idea that events like Watergate
violated the principles upon which the American system of government rested
and if not taken seriously, could end up affecting the freedom and self-respect of
Americans.90
During the mid to late 1980’s there was a significant shift in the way
scholars looked at the Nixon Presidency. This shift was based on looking at the
presidency as a whole instead of concentrating on Nixon as a man and his
Les Evans and Allen Myers, Watergate and the Myth of American Democracy, (New York:
Pathfinder Press, 1973) 8-10, 179; 90 Clark R. Mollenhoff, Game Plan for Disaster: An Ombudsman’s
Report on the Nixon’s Years, (New York: W.W Norton & Company, 1976) 10-14; Frank Mankiewicz,
Perfectly Clear: Nixon from Whittier to Watergate, (New York: The New York Times Book Co., 1973)
189-211; Judson Lehman James and Dorothy Buckton James, “Lessons of Watergate: The Nixon
Campaigns” Current History 67 (Summer 1974): 32-33.
90
70
failures related to the Watergate scandal. This new perspective allowed scholars
to focus on different aspects of the Administration leading them to praise Nixon
in areas he deserved while still criticizing him for unlawful actions.
Best selling author Stephen W. Stathis argued that Nixon must be granted
credit for the rational and systematic pursuit of a new world order that took
place during his presidency, including the end of American participation in the
Vietnam war, the establishment of diplomatic relations with Peking, détente with
the Soviet Union, and the first steps toward the control of strategic weapons. In
1983, Daniel L. Bratton, presented the idea that scholars have looked at Nixon’s
presidency with wrong eyes. He said that passions had clouded the objectivity of
historians and political analysts in their study of this presidency.
Sociologists Gladys Engle Lang and Kurt Lang agreed with these
statements and alleged that the media had influenced the study of Nixon’s
presidency more than any other event in the history of the United States. In 1984,
Gordon Hoxie, a specialist in presidential studies, wrote an article called The
Nixon Resignation and the Watergate Era Reforms Viewed Ten Years Later. In this
essay, he stated that in many ways Nixon was an exceedingly outstanding
President. He argued that his views on government reorganization and, in
association with Patrick Moynihan, his conceptions on social services, were in
71
advance of his time. He also agreed with the idea presented by Stathis related to
the President’s impressive accomplishments in foreign policy.91
One important question related to the study of Nixon’s presidency is what
scholars might have written about Nixon if Watergate had not dominated
interpretations of the man since 1974. Historian Joan Hoff answered this inquiry
in her remarkable, Nixon Reconsidered. Hoff’s analysis is based on the idea that to
properly understand Nixon, historians must place him in his time. She argued
that Nixon’s election took place during an extremely difficult period in U.S
history. Because of the time in which he was president, Hoff said, Nixon was in a
position where he could take risks and his time called for him and his advisers to
find new and innovative ways to be able to fix foreign policy issues. i Hoff
praised Nixon for his domestic policies related to welfare, civil rights, the
economy, the environment, and the reorganization of the federal bureaucracy.
Subsequently, the present state of the field of study concerning the Nixon
Administration has become increasingly diverse over time. The themes that are
being addressed are now more than just Watergate, Nixon and the decline of the
Stephen W. Stathis, “Nixon, Watergate and American Foreign Policy,” Presidential Studies
Quarterly 13 (Winter 1983): 129-147; Daniel L. Bratton, “The Rating of Presidents,” Presidential
Studies Quarterly 13 (Summer 1983): 401; Gladis Engle Lang and Kurt Lang, “Polling on
Watergate: The Battle for Public Opinion,” The Public Opinion Quarterly 44 (Winter 1980): 531;
Gordon Hoxie,”The Nixon Resignation and the Watergate Era Reforms Viewed Ten Years Later,”
Presidential Studies Quarterly 14 (Fall 1984): 657-659.
91
72
presidency. Topics like Nixon’s environmental policies, economic policies, and
foreign policies have become increasingly attractive to 21st century scholars. On
the other hand, it is important to say that the study of the Nixon Administration
still remains a young field with much to explore. According to historian Hoff, the
study of the Nixon administration was, is and will remain to be an ongoing field.
The sources that have become available make this administration a researcher’s
opportunity. As of 2013, there are close to 40 million pages of documents, 4000
hours of recorded conversations 5312 microforms, 2.2 million feet of film, 2000
pages of oral histories, and a recently added (2007-2011) collection of oral
histories including over 200 hours of video about this administration waiting for
scholars to look into them.92
The study of the environmental policies of the Nixon administration is
significant in the search for a more in depth understanding of the presidency.
Added to this, it addresses issues related to American environmental history as
well as American business history. The Clean Air Act of 1970 was one of the
most important environmental reforms of the Nixon era and it had an effect on
individuals and institutions related to politics, economics, and the environment.
This important piece of legislation had an instant effect on Americans and
Joan Hoff, “Researcher’s Nightmare: Studying the Nixon Presidency.” Presidential Studies
Quarterly, 26 (Winter 1996): 259-261.
92
73
continued to be an issue throughout the Ford presidency and the Carter
administration. President Ford was not satisfied with the minute extension in the
deadlines to reduce emissions that the Energy Supply and Environmental
Coordination Act of 1974 provided. For this reason he proposed legislation that
would further ease regulations on national emission standards and freeze the
standards for five years. The auto industry continued to oppose clean air
regulation and the debate continued into the Jimmy Carter years.
On August 8, 1977 President Carter claimed that the prolonged dispute
over Clean Air regulations had come to an end with the signing of the Clean Air
Act Amendments. According to Carter, this legislation established a responsible
and achievable timetable for auto companies to comply with environmental
regulations. Carter’s clean air bill passed with the approval and support of
Edmund Muskie and its main purpose was to build on the bill Nixon had signed
in 1970 while making improvements especially related to the enforcement of
these regulations.93
Jimmy Carter: "Clean Air Act Amendments of 1977 Statement on Signing H.R. 6161 Into Law.,"
August 8, 1977. Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project.
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=7946.
93
74
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